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Art and Music Connections
List of artists compiled by
Judy Grochowski from Getty TeacherArtExchange posts.
- In the 60s artists and musicians teamed up with
dancers and theatre folk to create happenings. John Cage,
Robert Rauschenberg, Merce Cunningham and
many others combined artmaking and music making (or in the case of
Cage, no music!). A fascinating time to look at how these
collaborations set the stage for post modern art.
- Earlier, at the turn of the new century, Picasso
and Cocteau helped out with the ballets of Dagliev by
creating costumes and sets and also helped express the
"modern" music of operas.
- Most recently, David Hockney has
built magical sets for the opera, Mozart's Magic Flute and others.
- Look into the watercolor works of Charles
Burchfield. His interpretations of sky/cloud forms are
based on his love and knowledge of music.
- Kandinsky was extremely
interested in the relationship between visual art and music- even
naming his paintings with musical terms.
From the moma.org website:
"Mondrian arrived
in New York in 1940, one of the many European artists who moved to the
United States to escape World War II. He fell in love with the city
immediately. He also fell in love with boogie-woogie music, to which
he was introduced on his first evening in New York, and he soon began,
as he said, to put a little boogie-woogie into his paintings.
Mondrian's
aesthetic doctrine of Neo-Plasticism restricted the painter's means to
the most basic kinds of line—that is, to straight horizontals and
verticals—and to a similarly limited color range, the primary triad
of red, yellow, and blue plus white, black, and the grays between. But
Broadway Boogie Woogie omits black and breaks Mondrian's once
uniform bars of color into multicolored segments. Bouncing against
each other, these tiny, blinking blocks of color create a vital and
pulsing rhythm, an optical vibration that jumps from intersection to
intersection like the streets of New York. At the same time, the
picture is carefully calibrated, its colors interspersed with gray and
white blocks in an extraordinary balancing act.
Mondrian's love of
boogie-woogie must have come partly because he saw its goals as
analogous to his own: "destruction of melody which is the
destruction of natural appearance; and construction through the
continuous opposition of pure means—dynamic rhythm."
- Tonight on PBS (KCPT in Kansas City) was a program created locally
by Mary Kemper on a black artist named Fred Brown. I believe it was
called "140 Wooster Street" after the address of his loft in New York.
I found out that Fred painted the History of Art murals in the
restaurant area of the Kemper Museum in KC. He painted numerous
portraits of Jazz musicians. It is a program that you should see if it
is shown in your area. (this from Woody in KC)
- Not exactly music, but
don't forget the way that Arthur Dove captured sound
in "Foghorns"
- Romare Bearden
was greatly influenced by jazz and jazz musicians. Harlem
Renaissance artists/musicians/writers were influenced by one
another. The Africobra artists even borrowed
jazz speak: "jampact jelli tite"
John Dowell
Moe Brooker
John McDaniel
Alan Olswing
Elena Bouvier
Adger Cowens
E. Sherman Hayman
Wadsworth Jarrell
Janet Sullivan Turner
Sam Gilliam
Jeff Donaldson
Michael D Harris
- don't forget about Grace
Slick (some critics say it isn't art, but i haven't
seen her shows).
- Degas,
with themes of the ballet and opera.
- Ocarinas-
clay whistles in the shape of animals. Have you given thought to
work that interacts with something
or the viewer? Like wind chimes, bells, rainsticks or even
using a material that makes sound when it rains or when the wind blows
(outdoor sculpture)? Making a connection with indigenous peoples. That
is probably very far from what you are thinking.
- Jackson Pollack
painted to Jazz.
I
love to teach about Kandinsky in relation to his
painting in musical terms. In fact, when Disney came to film my
classroom two weeks ago, that was one of the lessons I highlighted
because I love it so much. However, my first graders just
finished studying about Mondrian. This lesson can be adapted to
any grade level: We specifically discussed his "Boogie-woogie
Broadway" painting. The students discussed
what the painting reminded them of, and yes!, they actually discovered
it looked like city streets from standing on top of a
building and looking down! I had them get up and do the
"boogie-woogie", to jazz music, dancing around the room like
New York city lights blinking. Of course, my students have a
frame of reference to Broadway because many have been there (only 30
miles from NYC). They learned that Mondrian painted horizontal
and vertical squares and rectangle rows of the primary colors (great
elements for 1st grade), to show the city in an
abstract way and in terms of music. This was a concrete way to
show 1st graders the concept of "abstract", as well. Then, on
18"x18" white paper, glue sticks, and with lots of
paper red, blue, yellow, and white squares and rectangles, my students
created their own city in horizontal and vertical lines. They
did this while listening to jazz. (thias from Susan on Long
Island).
"During the
past 45 years, New York Artist Phillip Schreibman has
explored the visual expression of music in his powerful paintings,
which bring the viewer into the COLOR and MOTION of MUSIC."
the address is: paintingmusic.com
The only ones I am
coming up with are Komar & Melamid (People's
Choice Music) and Wassily Kandinsky. Info links are
posted below for anyone is intersted.
- -Komar & Melamid
http://www.diacenter.org/km/index.html
-Kandinski
http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/people_n2/art_n2/kandinski.html
- Romare
Bearden - African American artist, collage was his most
famous medium, was inspired by the Harlem Renaissance Jazz movement.
Many of his works were created/inspired by jazz music. He
actually wrote some music himself. The musical Marsalis family
recently created a jazz album for the Bearden exhibit at the National
Gallery of American Art, all titles on the album are inspired by
Bearden pieces. There is a great teachers guide available on the
site about Bearden http://www.nga.gov/education/classroom/
- Wassily
Kandinsky used to improvise his abstract paintings to music,
I read that somewhere in my college days of art history studying.
- Stuart Davis
worked to Jazz music. Sound comes to mind when you view many of his
works.
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